79 results on '"Krotenkova MV"'
Search Results
2. Resistive index of internal carotid artery and brain networks in patients with chronic cerebral ischemia
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RB Medvedev, OV Lagoda, V. F. Fokin, Konovalov Rn, N. V. Ponomareva, Krotenkova Mv, and MM Tanashyan
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Chronic cerebral ischemia ,business.industry ,Internal medicine ,medicine.artery ,medicine ,Cardiology ,In patient ,General Medicine ,Internal carotid artery ,business ,Resistive index - Abstract
Quantitative assessment of cerebral hemodynamics is important for patients with chronic cerebral ischemia (CCI), as it helps to reveal the pathogenesis of the disease and set the course for effective prevention and treatment. The study was aimed to assess the correlation of the left carotid artery (ICA) resistive index (RI) with cognitive functions and brain network organization based on fMRI data in patients with CCI (51 males and 105 females). The listed above indicators were studied in patients with the left ICA RI values below and above the average (0.54 ± 0.013). The lower, normal physiological ICA resistance levels corresponded to the more successful realization of verbal cognitive functions. In the first group, RI was within normal range (RI = 0.42 ± 0.007), and in the second group RI exceeded normal levels (RI = 0.61 ± 0.01). Variation of the right ICA RI did not correlate with the characteristics of verbal cognitive functions. FMRI data analysis was used to assess the differences in connectivity between various brain regions in the groups with low and high RI. The normal physiological and elevated RI values of the left ICA correlated with differences in the organization of brain networks: normal physiological RI values corresponded to a better organization of hemispheric connections in the basal ganglia and brainstem, and high RI values corresponded to a better organization of connections between the frontal regions and the cerebellum as well as occipital areas of the cerebral cortex. The left ICA RI can be considered as a biomarker of cognitive decline and brain networks reorganization in patients with CCI.
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- 2021
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3. Resistive index of internal carotid artery and brain networks in patients with chronic cerebral ischemia
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Fokin, VF, primary, Ponomareva, NV, additional, Medvedev, RB, additional, Konovalov, RN, additional, Krotenkova, MV, additional, Lagoda, OV, additional, and Tanashyan, MM, additional
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- 2021
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4. Prothrombogenic polymorphic variants of hemostatic and folate metabolism genes In patients with aseptic cerebral venous thrombosis
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Maksimova, MYu, primary, Dubovitskaya, YuI, additional, Krotenkova, MV, additional, and Shabalina, AA, additional
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- 2019
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5. Criteria of withdrawal of first-line DMT and substitution for second-line drugs (treatment escalation) basing on MRI results (About the article A.N. Boyko, at al. «The choice of the optimal drug for pathogenic treatment of multiple sclerosis: a current state of the problem» publishe in №10(2), 2014)
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Zavalishin Ia, Krotenkova Mv, Briukhov Vv, Peresedova Av, and Morozova Sn
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Psychiatry and Mental health ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Text mining ,Psychotherapist ,Second line ,business.industry ,First line ,Substitution (logic) ,medicine ,Neurology (clinical) ,business ,Psychiatry - Published
- 2015
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6. Age-related changes of interoceptive brain networks: Implications for interoception and alexithymia.
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Dobrushina OR, Dobrynina LA, Arina GA, Pechenkova EV, Kremneva EI, Gubanova MV, Novikova ES, Kazantseva DA, Suslina AD, and Krotenkova MV
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- Humans, Adult, Middle Aged, Male, Female, Aged, Young Adult, Adolescent, Brain physiology, Brain physiopathology, Brain diagnostic imaging, Nerve Net physiopathology, Nerve Net diagnostic imaging, Nerve Net physiology, Interoception physiology, Affective Symptoms physiopathology, Affective Symptoms diagnostic imaging, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Aging physiology
- Abstract
Aging is known to be associated with a decline in interoceptive abilities and changes in emotional processing, including alexithymia. As the brain areas supporting interoceptive awareness participate in the perception of emotion, we suggested that interoceptive decline and alexithymia in older adults may share common neural ground. To test this hypothesis, we administered functional magnetic resonance imaging-based heartbeat detection task to 62 adults of diverse ages (range 18-73) and evaluated a larger sample of older and younger adults using questionnaires characterizing interoceptive sensibility, alexithymia, and depressive attitudes. We found that increasing age was linked to decreased activation during the interoceptive task, including the right insular-opercular and supplementary motor areas (SMAs). Age also affected task-based functional connectivity, with two major effects being a decrease in the connectivity of the SMA-insular network and an increase in the connectivity of the prefrontal-lateral occipital network. Path analysis performed for interoceptive accuracy as the endogenous variable revealed that the impact of age was mediated by the functional activation of the insular cortex and SMA and by the connectivity between these areas. Another path analysis using alexithymia as the endogenous variable while controlling for depressive attitudes showed that the effect of age was mediated by interoceptive decline. The study supports the role of central mechanisms in age-related interoceptive decline and shows its implications for alexithymia. Since alexithymia represents a risk factor for mental and cardiovascular diseases, the study findings may open an important direction toward maintaining older adults' well-being. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2024 APA, all rights reserved).
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- 2024
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7. Cognitive Impairment in Cerebral Small Vessel Disease Is Associated with Corpus Callosum Microstructure Changes Based on Diffusion MRI.
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Dobrynina LA, Kremneva EI, Shamtieva KV, Geints AA, Filatov AS, Gadzhieva ZS, Gnedovskaya EV, Krotenkova MV, and Maximov II
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The cerebral small vessel disease (cSVD) is one of the main causes of vascular and mixed cognitive impairment (CI), and it is associated, in particular, with brain ageing. An understanding of structural tissue changes in an intact cerebral white matter in cSVD might allow one to develop the sensitive biomarkers for early diagnosis and monitoring of disease progression., Purpose of the Study: to evaluate microstructural changes in the corpus callosum (CC) using diffusion MRI (D-MRI) approaches in cSVD patients with different severity of CI and reveal the most sensitive correlations of diffusion metrics with CI., Methods: the study included 166 cSVD patients (51.8% women; 60.4 ± 7.6 years) and 44 healthy volunteers (65.9% women; 59.6 ± 6.8 years). All subjects underwent D-MRI (3T) with signal (diffusion tensor and kurtosis) and biophysical (neurite orientation dispersion and density imaging, NODDI, white matter tract integrity, WMTI, multicompartment spherical mean technique, MC-SMT) modeling in three CC segments as well as a neuropsychological assessment., Results: in cSVD patients, microstructural changes were found in all CC segments already at the subjective CI stage, which was found to worsen into mild CI and dementia. More pronounced changes were observed in the forceps minor. Among the signal models FA, MD, MK, RD, and RK, as well as among the biophysical models, MC-SMT (EMD, ETR) and WMTI (AWF) metrics exhibited the largest area under the curve (>0.85), characterizing the loss of microstructural integrity, the severity of potential demyelination, and the proportion of intra-axonal water, respectively. Conclusion: the study reveals the relevance of advanced D-MRI approaches for the assessment of brain tissue changes in cSVD. The identified diffusion biomarkers could be used for the clarification and observation of CI progression.
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- 2024
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8. [Identifying the neurostimulation target for treatment of cognitive impairment in aging and early cerebral small vessel disease].
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Dobrynina LA, Gadzhieva ZS, Dobrushina OR, Morozova SN, Kremneva EI, Volik AV, and Krotenkova MV
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- Adult, Humans, Brain, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Aging, Cognitive Dysfunction diagnostic imaging, Cognitive Dysfunction therapy, Motor Cortex physiology, Cerebral Small Vessel Diseases diagnostic imaging, Cerebral Small Vessel Diseases therapy
- Abstract
Objective: To develop individualized approaches to the use of neuromodulation as a non-pharmacological treatment of cognitive impairment (CI) based on the assessment of compensatory brain reserves in functional MRI (fMRI)., Material and Methods: Twenty-one adults over 45 years of age, representing a continuum from healthy norm to mild cognitive impairment due to aging and early cerebral small vessel disease, were studied. All participants underwent fMRI while performing two executive tasks - a modified Stroop task and selective counting. To assess the ability to compensate for CI in real life, functional activation and connectivity were analyzed using the BRIEF-MoCA score as a covariate, which is the difference in ratings between the Behavior Rating Inventory of Executive Function (BRIEF) and the Montreal Cognitive Assessment Scale (MoCA)., Results: Both fMRI tasks were associated with activation of areas of the frontoparietal control network, as well as supplementary motor area (SMA) and the pre-SMA, the lateral premotor cortex, and the cerebellum. An increase in pre- SMA connectivity was observed during the tasks. The BRIEF-MoCA score correlated firstly with connectivity of the left dorsolateral prefrontal cortex (DLPFC) and secondly with involvement of the occipital cortex during the counting task., Conclusions: The developed technique allows identification of the functionally relevant target within the left DLPFC in patients with CI in aging and early cerebral microangiopathy.
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- 2024
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9. Individual Variability of Broca's Area of the Brain in Women.
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Bogolepova IN, Krotenkova MV, Konovalov RN, Agapov PA, Malofeeva IG, and Bikmeev AT
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- Humans, Female, Brain diagnostic imaging, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Cell Membrane, Frontal Lobe diagnostic imaging, Brain Mapping, Broca Area diagnostic imaging, Cerebral Cortex
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In this article, we studied individual features of the macroscopic structure of Broca's area of the brains in 9 women (18 hemispheres) aged from 20 to 30 years, without any mental or neurological disorders. By using MRI, the structures of the sulci and gyri of the pars triangularis and pars opercularis of Broca's area were studied: the anterior and ascending rami of the lateral sulcus, the radial, diagonal, precentral, inferior frontal, and lateral sulci. We also studied the relationship between the pars triangularis and pars opercularis as well as their relationships with neighboring cortical structures. We measured the volume of the pars triangularis and pars opercularis and the thickness of their cortex. Significant individual variability in the location and relationships between the anterior ramus of the lateral sulcus and the ascending ramus of the lateral sulcus, as well as structural features of the pars triangularis and pars opercularis of Broca's area were demonstrated., (© 2023. Springer Science+Business Media, LLC, part of Springer Nature.)
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- 2023
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10. L-Arginine-eNOS-NO Functional System in Brain Damage and Cognitive Impairments in Cerebral Small Vessel Disease.
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Dobrynina LA, Shabalina AA, Shamtieva KV, Kremneva EI, Zabitova MR, Krotenkova MV, Burmak AG, and Gnedovskaya EV
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- Aged, Female, Humans, Middle Aged, Blood-Brain Barrier pathology, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Nitric Oxide, Male, Brain Injuries pathology, Cerebral Small Vessel Diseases pathology, Cognitive Dysfunction pathology, White Matter pathology
- Abstract
Cerebral small vessel disease (CSVD) is a significant cause of cognitive impairment (CI), disability, and mortality. The insufficient effectiveness of antihypertensive therapy in curbing the disease justifies the search for potential targets for modifying therapy and indicators supporting its use. Using a laser-assisted optical rotational cell analyzer (LORRCA, Mechatronics, The Netherlands), the rheological properties and deformability of erythrocytes before and after incubation with 10 μmol/L of L-arginine, the nitric oxide (NO) donor, blood-brain barrier (BBB) permeability assessed by dynamic contrast-enhanced MRI, clinical, and MRI signs were studied in 73 patients with CSVD (48 women, mean age 60.1 ± 6.5 years). The control group consisted of 19 volunteers (14 women (73.7%), mean age 56.9 ± 6.4 years). The erythrocyte disaggregation rate (y-dis) after incubation with L-arginine showed better performance than other rheological characteristics in differentiating patients with reduced NO bioavailability/NO deficiency by its threshold values. Patients with y-dis > 113 s
-1 had more severe CI, arterial hypertension, white matter lesions, and increased BBB permeability in grey matter and normal-appearing white matter (NAWM). A test to assess changes in the erythrocyte disaggregation rate after incubation with L-arginine can be used to identify patients with impaired NO bioavailability. L-arginine may be part of a therapeutic strategy for CSVD with CI.- Published
- 2023
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11. [Disruption of corpus callosum microstructural integrity by diffusion MRI as a predictor of progression of cerebral microangiopathy].
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Dobrynina LA, Kremneva EI, Shamtieva KV, Geints AA, Filatov AS, Trubitsyna VV, Bitsieva ET, Byrochkina AA, Akhmetshina YI, Maksimov II, and Krotenkova MV
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- Humans, Female, Middle Aged, Aged, Male, Corpus Callosum diagnostic imaging, Diffusion Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Water, Disease Progression, Cerebral Small Vessel Diseases, Demyelinating Diseases
- Abstract
Objective: To assess the microstructural integrity of the corpus callosum in patients with cerebral small vessel disease (cSVD) using signal and biophysical diffusion MRI models and to identify the most sensitive markers of disease progression., Material and Methods: Diffusion MRI (3 Tesla) was performed in 166 patients (51.8% women; mean age 60.4±7.6) with cSVD and cognitive impairment of varying severity and in 44 healthy volunteers (65.9% women; mean age 59.6±6.8), followed by calculation of signal (diffusion tensor and diffusion kurtosis) and biophysical (WMTI, NODDI, MC-SMT) models, from which profiles of three corpus callosum segments were constructed., Results: The best results were obtained for metrics in the forceps minor and body of the corpus callosum. Among the metrics of the signal models in the forceps minor, fraction anisotropy (FA) and mean diffusion (MD), which characterize the overall loss of microstructural integrity and increase in extra-axonal water, as well as indirect markers of demyelination when considering transverse diffusion parameters (radial diffusion and radial kurtosis), had the larger area under the curve according to the ROC analysis. Among the metrics of the biophysical models in the forceps minor, a larger area under the curve was found in the MC-SMT model for extra-axonal transverse diffusion (ETR), mean diffusion (EMD), and intra-axonal water fraction (INTRA), and in the WMTI model for intra-axonal water fraction (AWF). ETR had high inverse correlations with INTRA and AWF, while INTRA and AWF had high direct intercorrelations., Conclusion: Metrics of signaling (FA, MD, RD, RK) and biophysical patterns (ETR, EMD, INTRA, AWF) in the forceps minor and the corpus callosum body can be considered as indicators of cSVD progression. They indicate disease progression, mainly by an increase in extra-axonal water with the development of demyelination and tissue degeneration in the corpus callosum.
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- 2023
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12. [Gender morphology of Broca's motor speech area].
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Bogolepova IN, Krotenkova MV, Konovalov RN, Agapov PA, Malofeeva IG, and Bikmeev AT
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- Humans, Male, Female, Young Adult, Adult, Brain, Language, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Frontal Lobe, Broca Area diagnostic imaging, Speech
- Abstract
Objective: To study the general patterns and differences in the macroscopic structure of Broca's motor speech area in the left and right hemispheres of male and female brains., Material and Methods: The study was conducted on MRI images of the brains of 9 men and 9 women (36 hemispheres in total). All the people were between the ages of 20 and 30, without any mental or neurological disorders. The localization and structure of the main sulci and gyri of Broca's area, namely the pars triangularis and pars opercularis, were studied. In addition, the topography of the main sulci in Broca's motor speech area, namely their shape, length, and relative position to the other sulci, was analyzed., Results: The features of the localization of the sulci in Broca's area, the differences in the number of additional sulci in the pars triangularis and pars opercularis of male and female brains, as well as the degree of asymmetry of Broca's area in the left and right hemispheres of the brains of men and women were established.In modern neuroscience a new scientific direction of genderology, which studies the behavior and cognitive functions of males and females, is rapidly developing., Conclusion: Broca's motor speech area of the brain of men and women differs in macroscopic structure.
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- 2023
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13. [Nitric oxide availability in cerebral microangiopathy].
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Dobrynina LA, Shabalina AA, Shamtieva KV, Kremneva EI, Zabitova MR, Burmak AG, Byrochkina AA, Akhmetshina YI, Gnedovskaya EV, and Krotenkova MV
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- Humans, Female, Middle Aged, Aged, Male, Nitric Oxide, Arginine, Blood-Brain Barrier, Brain Injuries, Cerebral Small Vessel Diseases
- Abstract
Objective: To develop a test of individual nitric oxide (NO) availability based on changes in erythrocyte rheological properties after incubation with a NO donor and to evaluate the role of these disorders in brain damage and development of cognitive impairment (CI) in cerebral small vessel disease (cSVD)., Material and Methods: In 73 cSVD patients (48 (65.8%) women, mean age 60.1±6.5), the rheological properties of erythrocytes before and after incubation with 10 μmol/L L-arginine-NO donor were evaluated using a laser-optical rotating cell analyzer, and the blood-brain barrier (BBB) permeability by MRI-T1 dynamic contrast., Results: Among the studied parameters of erythrocyte rheological properties, the best characteristic by ROC analysis was the rate of erythrocyte disaggregation (y-dis) after incubation with L-arginine (area under the curve 0.733 (0.609-0.856), sensitivity 67%, specificity 79%). Patients with a y-dis threshold >113 sec
- 1 had more severe CI, arterial hypertension, white matter lesions, and increased BBB permeability in gray matter and normal-appearing white matter., Conclusion: The prolonged rate of erythrocyte disaggregation in cSVD patients after incubation with L-arginine indicates the risk for disease progression due to decreased NO bioavailability/disruption of the functional L-arginine-eNOS-NO system. This test can be used to assess individual NO bioavailability and potentially identify indications for modifying therapy with NO donors such as L-arginine. Clinical trials are needed to standardize and evaluate the efficacy of NO donor therapy in patients with cSVD and CI.- Published
- 2023
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14. Genetic association of apolipoprotein E genotype with EEG alpha rhythm slowing and functional brain network alterations during normal aging.
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Ponomareva NV, Andreeva TV, Protasova M, Konovalov RN, Krotenkova MV, Kolesnikova EP, Malina DD, Kanavets EV, Mitrofanov AA, Fokin VF, Illarioshkin SN, and Rogaev EI
- Abstract
The ε4 allele of the apolipoprotein E ( APOE 4+) genotype is a major genetic risk factor for Alzheimer's disease (AD), but the mechanisms underlying its influence remain incompletely understood. The study aimed to investigate the possible effect of the APOE genotype on spontaneous electroencephalogram (EEG) alpha characteristics, resting-state functional MRI (fMRI) connectivity (rsFC) in large brain networks and the interrelation of alpha rhythm and rsFC characteristics in non-demented adults during aging. We examined the EEG alpha subband's relative power, individual alpha peak frequency (IAPF), and fMRI rsFC in non-demented volunteers (age range 26-79 years) stratified by the APOE genotype. The presence of the APOE4+ genotype was associated with lower IAPF and lower relative power of the 11-13 Hz alpha subbands. The age related decrease in EEG IAPF was more pronounced in the APOE4+ carriers than in the APOE4+ non-carriers ( APOE4 -). The APOE4+ carriers had a stronger fMRI positive rsFC of the interhemispheric regions of the frontoparietal, lateral visual and salience networks than the APOE4- individuals. In contrast, the negative rsFC in the network between the left hippocampus and the right posterior parietal cortex was reduced in the APOE4+ carriers compared to the non-carriers. Alpha rhythm slowing was associated with the dysfunction of hippocampal networks. Our results show that in adults without dementia APOE4+ genotype is associated with alpha rhythm slowing and that this slowing is age-dependent. Our data suggest predominant alterations of inhibitory processes in large-scale brain network of non-demented APOE4+ carriers. Moreover, dysfunction of large-scale hippocampal network can influence APOE -related alpha rhythm vulnerability., Competing Interests: The authors declare that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest., (Copyright © 2022 Ponomareva, Andreeva, Protasova, Konovalov, Krotenkova, Kolesnikova, Malina, Kanavets, Mitrofanov, Fokin, Illarioshkin and Rogaev.)
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- 2022
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15. Enhancing Brain Connectivity With Infra-Low Frequency Neurofeedback During Aging: A Pilot Study.
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Dobrushina OR, Dobrynina LA, Arina GA, Kremneva EI, Novikova ES, Gubanova MV, Pechenkova EV, Suslina AD, Aristova VV, Trubitsyna VV, and Krotenkova MV
- Abstract
Aging is associated with decreased functional connectivity in the main brain networks, which can underlie changes in cognitive and emotional processing. Neurofeedback is a promising non-pharmacological approach for the enhancement of brain connectivity. Previously, we showed that a single session of infra-low frequency neurofeedback results in increased connectivity between sensory processing networks in healthy young adults. In the current pilot study, we aimed to evaluate the possibility of enhancing brain connectivity during aging with the use of infra-low frequency neurofeedback. Nine females aged 52 ± 7 years with subclinical signs of emotional dysregulation, including anxiety, mild depression, and somatoform symptoms, underwent 15 sessions of training. A resting-state functional MRI scan was acquired before and after the training. A hypothesis-free intrinsic connectivity analysis showed increased connectivity in regions in the bilateral temporal fusiform cortex, right supplementary motor area, left amygdala, left temporal pole, and cerebellum. Next, a seed-to-voxel analysis for the revealed regions was performed using the post- vs. pre-neurofeedback contrast. Finally, to explore the whole network of neurofeedback-related connectivity changes, the regions revealed by the intrinsic connectivity and seed-to-voxel analyses were entered into a network-based statistical analysis. An extended network was revealed, including the temporal and occipital fusiform cortex, multiple areas from the visual cortex, the right posterior superior temporal sulcus, the amygdala, the temporal poles, the superior parietal lobule, and the supplementary motor cortex. Clinically, decreases in alexithymia, depression, and anxiety levels were observed. Thus, infra-low frequency neurofeedback appears to be a promising method for enhancing brain connectivity during aging, and subsequent sham-controlled studies utilizing larger samples are feasible., Competing Interests: The authors declare that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest., (Copyright © 2022 Dobrushina, Dobrynina, Arina, Kremneva, Novikova, Gubanova, Pechenkova, Suslina, Aristova, Trubitsyna and Krotenkova.)
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- 2022
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16. Interoception during aging: Functional neuroimaging data from a heartbeat detection task.
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Dobrushina OR, Dobrynina LA, Arina GA, Pechenkova EV, Kremneva EI, Trubitsyna VV, Gubanova MV, Belopasova AV, Novikova ES, Tsypushtanova MM, Makarova AG, Vorobeva VP, Kazantseva DA, Aristova VV, Suslina AD, Perepelkina OS, and Krotenkova MV
- Abstract
Interoception is critically important for allostatic adaptation and emotional regulation, and aberrant interoceptive processing is increasingly recognized to be involved in the pathogenesis of neurological, psychiatric and cardiovascular diseases. Despite the fact that interoceptive abilities decline with age, the corresponding neural correlates and clinical consequences of these age-related changes have yet to be discovered. We present a dataset that contains task-based functional neuroimaging data from 50 adults aged 40-65 years and 12 adults aged 18-25 years who performed an fMRI-based heartbeat-detection task. Of the 62, 38 participants also took part in a rubber hand illusion experiment outside the scanner. While the dataset was mainly created to study age-related changes in interoception, it can also be used in body perception research in general. The provided group data may serve as a reference for clinical studies on interoception involving older adults., Competing Interests: The authors declare that they have no known competing financial interests or personal relationships that could have appeared to influence the work reported in this paper., (© 2022 The Author(s).)
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- 2022
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17. Daily blood pressure profile and blood-brain barrier permeability in patients with cerebral small vessel disease.
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Dobrynina LA, Shamtieva KV, Kremneva EI, Zabitova MR, Akhmetzyanov BM, Gnedovskaya EV, and Krotenkova MV
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- Aged, Blood Pressure, Blood Pressure Monitoring, Ambulatory, Blood-Brain Barrier, Female, Humans, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Male, Middle Aged, Permeability, Cerebral Small Vessel Diseases complications, Hypertension, White Matter diagnostic imaging
- Abstract
Cerebral small vessel disease (CSVD) plays an important role in cognitive impairment, stroke, disability, and death. Hypertension is the main risk factor for CSVD. The use of antihypertensive therapy has not resulted in the expected decrease in CSVD complications, which may be related to the underestimation of significance of daily blood pressure profile for blood-brain barrier (BBB) permeability. 53 patients with CSVD of varying severity (mean age 60.08 ± 6.8 years, 69.8% women, subjects with treated long-standing hypertension vs. normotensive subjects - 84.8% vs. 15.2%) and 17 healthy volunteers underwent ambulatory blood pressure monitoring (ABPM) and MRI, including T1-weighted dynamic contrast-enhanced magnetic resonance imaging for assessing BBB permeability. Most of ABPM parameters in CSVD patients did not differ from controls, but were associated with the severity of white matter hyperintensity (WMH) and the total CSVD score. BBB permeability in normal-appearing white matter (NAWM) and grey matter (GM) was significantly higher in CSVD patients, and the severity of BBB permeability remained similar in patients with different stages of WMH. Among BBB permeability parameters, the area under the curve, corresponding to an increase in the contrast transit time in NAWM, had the greatest number of correlations with deviations of ABPM parameters. BBB permeability in CSVD is a universal mechanism of NAWM and GM damage associated with a slight increase in ABPM parameters. It is obvious that the treatment of hypertension in patients with not severe WMH should be more aggressive and carried out under the control of ABPM., (© 2022. The Author(s).)
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- 2022
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18. [Controlled arterial hypertension and blood-brain barrier damage in patients with age-related cerebral small vessel disease and cognitive impairments].
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Dobrynina LA, Shamtieva KV, Kremneva EI, Zabitova MR, Gadzhieva ZS, and Krotenkova MV
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- Humans, Female, Middle Aged, Aged, Blood-Brain Barrier diagnostic imaging, Cerebral Small Vessel Diseases complications, Cerebral Small Vessel Diseases diagnostic imaging, White Matter diagnostic imaging, Hypertension complications, Hypertension drug therapy, Cognitive Dysfunction etiology
- Abstract
Objective: To evaluate the relationship between blood pressure (BP) profile and blood-brain barrier (BBB) permeability in age-related cerebral microangiopathy (CMA) in patients with- and without controlled arterial hypertension (AH)., Material and Methods: 24-hour ambulatory BP monitoring (ABPM), brain MRI, including T1-weighted dynamic contrast images, were performed in 53 patients with CMA (age 60.1±6.8, women 69.8%, controlled hypertension/normal BP 84.8%/15.2%) and 17 healthy volunteers., Results: ABPM showed good control of AH with most of the assessed parameters associated with the severity of white matter hyperintensity (WMH). The permeability of the BBB in normal-appearing white matter (NAWM) and gray matter in patients with CMA was significantly higher than in the control group and was associated with ABPM parameters. The permeability of the BBB in WMH decreased with an increase in its severity., Conclusion: BBB permeability is a universal mechanism of NAWM and gray matter damage that supports the progression of WMH in CMA patients with controlled AH and without AH. The relationship of increased BBB permeability with slight deviations of ABPM can be explained by common mechanisms of their development due to endothelial dysfunction due to CMA and also points to the utility of more aggressive AH treatment. It is advisable to study the effect of antihypertensive and vascular drugs on BBB permeability with a view to their potential use in CMA.
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- 2022
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19. [Resting state functional MRI in neurology and psychiatry].
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Kremneva EI, Sinitsyn DO, Dobrynina LA, Suslina AD, and Krotenkova MV
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- Brain diagnostic imaging, Humans, Magnetic Resonance Imaging methods, Rest, Neurology, Psychiatry
- Abstract
Resting state functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) is a neuroimaging technique based on analyzing spontaneous, low frequency fluctuations in the activity of brain areas by measuring by their MRI signal to investigate the functional architecture of the brain during rest. The use of resting state fMRI opens up possibilities for assessing brain functional relationships in both normal conditions and in different CNS pathologies in order to clarify the disturbed mechanisms of brain functioning and develop approaches for therapeutic non-invasive neuromodulation. Understanding the acquisition of data, the features of their preprocessing and analysis is very important for clinicians who use resting state fMRI in their studies, since it is neurologists, psychiatrists, and neurosurgeons who set research tasks and are the final consumers of the results. The article details the methodological features of obtaining and analyzing resting state fMRI data, the advantages and disadvantages of the method. The article is intended for a wide range of specialists using this method in their work or planning to include it in their research.
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- 2022
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20. [Predictors and integrative index of severity of cognitive disorders in cerebral microangiopathy].
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Dobrynina LA, Gadzhieva ZS, Shamtieva KV, Kremneva EI, Filatov AS, Bitsieva ET, Mirokova ED, and Krotenkova MV
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- Aged, Cognition, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Cerebral Small Vessel Diseases complications, Cerebral Small Vessel Diseases diagnostic imaging, Cognition Disorders complications, Cognitive Dysfunction diagnostic imaging, Cognitive Dysfunction etiology, White Matter diagnostic imaging, White Matter pathology
- Abstract
Objective: To search for sensitive predictors of cognitive impairment (CI) and an integrative index of their severity., Material and Methods: We assessed CI and diffusion-tensor MRI (DT-MRI) in the regions of interest (ROI) significant for CI in 74 patients (48 women, mean age 60.6±6.9 years) with cerebral small vessel disease (CSVD). The results of DT-MRI were used to construct a predictive model of CI using binary logistic regression and to calculate an integrative index of CI severity., Results: According to the constructed model, the predictors of CI were axial diffusivity (AD) of posterior frontal periventricular normal-appearing white matter (pvNAWM), right middle cingulum bundle (CB) and mid-posterior corpus callosum (CC). ROC analysis showed strong model predictive power for CI in cSVD (AUC (95% CI): 0.845 (0.740-0.950)). The threshold value of the AD predictors model for CI in cSVD was 0.53 (sensitivity 84%, specificity 76%). AD predictors of CI showed significant correlations with white matter hyperintensities volume and MoCA scores. The presence of CI as measured by neuropsychological testing and regression equation solution was corresponded to individual AD predictors of patients exceeding the CI model's threshold., Conclusion: Disturbances in the AD of pvNAWM, right middle CB and mid-posterior CC associated with axonal damage are a predominant factor in the development of CI in CSVD. The predictors of CI and the integrative index of CI severity calculated on their basis can potentially be used as a tool for assessing the severity of CI and the effectiveness of treatment, as well as in clarifying the interaction between vascular and degenerative pathology and in developing measures for the prevention of CI in patients with MRI signs of cSVD.
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- 2022
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21. [Quantitative susceptibility mapping in assessment of inflammation and neurodegeneration in multiple sclerosis].
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Matrosova MS, Bryukhov VV, Belskaya GN, and Krotenkova MV
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- Humans, Brain pathology, Magnetic Resonance Imaging methods, Iron metabolism, Inflammation, Brain Mapping methods, Multiple Sclerosis pathology
- Abstract
Quantitative susceptibility mapping (QSM) is a relatively new MRI technique that may potentially help estimate iron concentrations in the brain. It plays a big role in diagnosis of many pathological processes, including multiple sclerosis (MS). Iron metabolism in the brain is a complex and not fully understood process. It is known that the content of iron in the brain increases with age; in addition, its accumulation is often observed in many neurodegenerative diseases, including MS foci, and its amount changes over time. In this regard, the values of magnetic susceptibility obtained using QSM can potentially become a convenient biomarker that reflects the latent activity and progression of MS, which, in turn, can influence the choice of therapy and the tactics of treating patients.
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- 2022
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22. Covert Brain Infarcts in Patients with Philadelphia Chromosome-Negative Myeloproliferative Disorders.
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Kuznetsova PI, Raskurazhev AA, Konovalov RN, Krotenkova MV, Chechetkin AO, Lagoda OV, Melikhyan AL, and Tanashyan MM
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Backgrounds and Purpose: Philadelphia chromosome-negative myeloproliferative disorders (Ph-negative MPD) are a rare group of hematological diseases, including three distinct pathologies: essential thrombocythemia (ET), polycythemia vera (PV), and primary myelofibrosis (PMF). They most often manifest with thrombotic complications, including cerebrovascular events. Covert brain infarcts (CBIs) are defin ed as predominantly small ischemic cerebral lesions that are detected using magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) in the absence of clinical stroke events. The relationship between MPD and CBIs remains unclear., Methods: Included in the study were 103 patients with the diagnosis of Ph-MPD (according to WHO 2016 criteria) (median age-47 (35; 54) years; 67% female). In total, 38 patients had ET, 42 had PV, and 23 had PMF. They underwent clinical examination, routine laboratory analyses (complete blood count), brain MRI, ultrasound carotid artery, flow-mediated dilatation (as a measure of endothelial dysfunction-FMD)., Results: Overall, 23 patients experienced an ischemic stroke (as per MRI and/or clinical history), of which 16 (15.5%) could be classified as CBIs. The rate of CBIs per MPD subtype was statistically non-significant between groups ( p = 0.35): ET-13.2%, PV-21.4%, and PMF-8.7%. The major vascular risk factors, including arterial hypertension, carotid atherosclerosis, and prior venous thrombosis, were not associated with CBIs ( p > 0.05). Age was significantly higher in patients with CBIs compared to patients without MRI ischemic lesions: 50 (43; 57) years vs. 36 (29; 48) ( p = 0.002). The frequency of headaches was comparable between the two groups. CBIs were associated with endothelial dysfunction (OR - 0.71 (95% CI: 0.49-0.90; p = 0.02)) and higher hemoglobin levels (OR-1.21 (95% CI: 1.06-1.55); p =0.03)., Conclusions: CBIs are common in patients with Ph-negative MPD. Arterial hypertension and carotid atherosclerosis were not associated with CBIs in this group of patients. The most significant factors in the development of CBIs were endothelial dysfunction (as measured by FMD) and high hemoglobin levels. Patients with Ph-negative MPD and CBIs were older and had more prevalent endothelial dysfunction.
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- 2021
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23. Sensory integration in interoception: Interplay between top-down and bottom-up processing.
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Dobrushina OR, Arina GA, Dobrynina LA, Novikova ES, Gubanova MV, Belopasova AV, Vorobeva VP, Suslina AD, Pechenkova EV, Perepelkina OS, Kremneva EI, and Krotenkova MV
- Subjects
- Female, Hand, Humans, Insular Cortex, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Proprioception, Illusions, Interoception
- Abstract
Although the neural systems supporting interoception have been outlined in general, the exact processes underlying the integration of visceral signals still await research. Based on the predictive coding concept, we aimed to reveal the neural networks responsible for the bottom-up (stimulus-dependent) and top-down (model-dependent) processing of interoceptive information. In a study of 30 female participants, we utilized two classical body perception experiments-the rubber hand illusion and a heartbeat detection task (cardioception), with the latter being implemented in fMRI settings. We interpreted a stronger rubber hand illusion, as measured by higher proprioceptive drift, as a tendency to rely on actual sensory experience, i.e., bottom-up processing, while lower proprioceptive drift served as an indicator of the prevalence of top-down, model-based influences. To reveal the bottom-up and top-down processes in cardioception, we performed a seed-based connectivity analysis of the heartbeat detection task, using as seeds the areas with known roles in sensory integration and entering proprioceptive drift as a covariate. The results revealed a left thalamus-dependent network positively associated with proprioceptive drift (bottom-up processing) and a left amygdala-dependent network negatively associated with drift (top-down processing). Bottom-up processing was related to thalamic connectivity with the left frontal operculum and anterior insula, anterior cingulate cortex, hypothalamus, right planum polare and right inferior frontal gyrus. Top-down processing was related to amygdalar connectivity with the rostral prefrontal cortex and an area involving the left frontal opercular and anterior insular cortex, with the latter area being an intersection of the two networks. Thus, we revealed the neural mechanisms underlying the integration of interoceptive information through the interaction between the current sensory experience and internal models., Competing Interests: Declaration of competing interest None., (Copyright © 2021 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)
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- 2021
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24. Anti-NR2 glutamate receptor antibodies as an early biomarker of cerebral small vessel disease.
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Dobrynina LA, Alexandrova EV, Zabitova MR, Kalashnikova LA, Krotenkova MV, and Akhmetzyanov BM
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- Aged, Biomarkers blood, Cognitive Dysfunction blood, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Risk Factors, Autoantibodies blood, Cerebral Small Vessel Diseases blood, Receptors, N-Methyl-D-Aspartate blood
- Abstract
Objectives: Cerebral small vessel disease (SVD) associated with age and vascular risk factors is one of the leading causes of cognitive disorders as well as ischemic and hemorrhagic strokes. The pathogenesis of this disease has not been fully understood yet. The previously established association of the antibodies against the NR2 subunit of the NMDA receptor (NR2ab) with the mechanisms of SVD such as ischemia and blood-brain barrier (BBB) disruption, might suggest their importance in the brain damage., Design & Methods: We studied the NR2ab serum level in 70 patients (45 females, 61.1 ± 6.3 y.o.) with different severity of cognitive impairment and MRI features of SVD and 20 healthy volunteers (12 females, 58.5 ± 6.4 y.o.)., Results: The elevated level of NR2ab was associated with subjective cognitive impairment (SCI) (p = 0.028) and mild cognitive impairment (MCI) (p = 0.017), Fazekas grade (F) 2 (p = 0,002) and F3 (p = 0,009) of white matter hyperintensities (WMH) and the numbers of lacunes in the cerebral white matter (less than 5) (p = 0,039)., Conclusion: The detected increase in serum NR2ab level in patients with SCI, as well as the minimal amount of white matter lacunes, is most likely caused by hypoxia-induced endothelial damage in the early stage of SVD. Normal NR2ab values in patients with F1 WMH, the increased NR2ab level in patients with F2 and F3 WMH and those with the minimal number of lacunes can indicate that NR2bs are involved in diffuse brain damage due to hypoxia-induced loss of BBB integrity., (Copyright © 2021 The Canadian Society of Clinical Chemists. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
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- 2021
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25. White matter hyperintensity in different migraine subtypes.
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Dobrynina LA, Suslina AD, Gubanova MV, Belopasova AV, Sergeeva AN, Evers S, Gnedovskaya EV, and Krotenkova MV
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- Adult, Biomarkers, Female, Headache diagnosis, Humans, Magnetic Resonance Imaging methods, Male, Pain Threshold, White Matter diagnostic imaging, Migraine Disorders diagnosis, White Matter physiopathology
- Abstract
The diagnostic value of white matter hyperintensities (WMH) in different types of migraineare unknown. To evaluate the WMH pattern of different subtypes in migraine patients with no vascular risk factors. 92 migraine patients (73 females, mean age 34.6 ± 8.9; 61 episodic migraine, 31 chronic migraine, 36 migraine with aura, 56 migraine without aura) without vascular risk factors underwent brain MRI (3 T). We also included a matched healthy control group with no migraine (n = 24). The prevalence of WMH in different types of migraine was similar and ranged from 38.7 to 44.4%; the control group showed no WMH at all. Lesions were located within frontal, parietal and temporal lobes (in order of decreasing incidence) in juxtacortical and/or deep white matter. WMH appeared as round or slightly elongated foci with a median size of 2.5 mm [1.5; 3]. Total number, size and prevalence of WMH by lobes and white matter regions were similar between groups, and no interaction with age or sex was found. The number of lesions within the frontal lobe juxtacortical white matter correlated with the age of patients (r = 0.331, p = 0.001) and the duration since migraine onset (r = 0.264, p = 0.012). Patients with different migraine subtypes and without vascular risk factors are characterized by a similar pattern of WMH in the absence of subclinical infarctions or microbleedings. Therefore, WMH have no relevant prognostic value regarding the course of migraine and vascular complications. WMH pattern may be used to differentiate migraine as a primary disorder and other disorders with migraine-like headache and WMH.
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- 2021
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26. [Salt sensitivity and osmotic fragility are newly specified risk factors for age-related cerebral microangiopathy].
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Dobrynina LA, Shabalina AA, Shamtieva KV, Krotenkova MV, and Kalashnikova LA
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- Aged, Erythrocytes, Female, Humans, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Male, Middle Aged, Risk Factors, Cerebral Small Vessel Diseases epidemiology, Cerebral Small Vessel Diseases etiology, Hypertension, Osmotic Fragility
- Abstract
Aim/: To assess individual values of salt sensitivity and osmotic fragility on the patient's erythrocytes and evaluate predictive ability of these parameters in the development of cerebral small vessel disease (CSVD)., Material and Methods: The study included 73 patients with CSVD (48 women, mean age 60.1±6.5 years) and 19 volunteers (14 women, mean age 56.9±5.4 years). Their erythrocytes were used for the measurement of salt-sensitivity by a modified salt blood test and of osmotic fragility by the classical osmotic fragility test. Binary logistic regression was used to assess the ability of salt-sensitivity and osmotic fragility to predict CSVD development. ROC analysis was used to find out the optimal threshold values of these predictors, their sensitivity and specificity., Results: An increase in salt sensitivity (cut-off: 8.5 mm/h; sensitivity 64%, specificity 74%) and osmotic fragility (cut-off: 0.62 u.a.; sensitivity 52%, specificity 90%) or their simultaneous use ( p of the model <0.000001, cut-off 0.62; sensitivity 88%, specificity 68%) are the independent predictors of CSVD. An increase in salt sensitivity and osmotic fragility is also independently associated with the acceleration of severity of white matter hyperintensities according to Fazekas stages ( p =0.019 and 0.004, respectively)., Conclusion: The possibility of prediction of CSVD according to an increase in salt sensitivity and osmotic fragility allows us to consider them as the risk factors of CSVD. The standardization of these tests for use in clinical practice is necessary to identify the risk group for CSVD and its individual prevention.
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- 2021
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27. [Aneurysms and pathological tortuosity of the internal carotid and vertebral arteries in patients with dissection of these vessels: a results of long-term study].
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Kalashnikova LA, Danilova MS, Gubanova MV, Dobrynina LA, Dreval MV, and Krotenkova MV
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- Carotid Artery, Internal diagnostic imaging, Dissection, Female, Humans, Vertebral Artery diagnostic imaging, Aneurysm diagnostic imaging, Carotid Artery, Internal, Dissection diagnostic imaging, Carotid Artery, Internal, Dissection epidemiology, Intracranial Aneurysm diagnostic imaging, Vertebral Artery Dissection diagnostic imaging, Vertebral Artery Dissection epidemiology
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Objective: To study the frequency, angiographic and clinical features of aneurysms and tortuosity (T) in patients with internal carotid artery (ICA) and vertebral artery (VA) dissection., Material and Methods: Three hundred and twenty-seven patients (average age - 37.8±9.1 years, women - 57%) with ICA/VA dissection verified by neuroimaging were studied. Repeated neuroimaging in 2.4±3.3 years was performed in 254 patients. In one case, tortuous ICA fragment resected at the surgery complicated by dissection was histologically studied., Results: ICA/VA aneurysms were found in 46 (14%) patients. At repeated neuroimaging aneurysms did not change (38%), increased (11%) or decreased in size (8%), were not detected (38%) or were detected for the first time (5%). Patients with aneurysms compared with those without aneurysms more often had multiple dissections (44% vs. 20%, p =0.001) and T (35% vs. 13%, p =0.001), but less frequently the artery lumen occlusion in the acute period (15% vs. 40%, p =0.001). T was found in 53 (16%) patients. Patients with T compared with patients without T were older (40.6±8.1 vs. 37.3±9.3 years, p =0.039), more often had aneurysms (30% vs. 11%, p =0.001) and recanalization of occlusion observed in the acute period (89% vs. 54%, p =0.006). Dissection more often occurred in tortuous than in non-tortuous artery (79% vs 21%, p =0.001). During 4.8±3.6 years of follow-up, TIA developed inone patient (2%) with an aneurysm. Histological examination of tortuous ICA fragment, which also contained a small aneurysm, revealed dysplastic changes., Conclusion: The association between aneurism and T in patients with ICA/VA dissection suggests their common basis - the arterial wall weakness due to dysplasia. Age-related changes are also important for T development. T is a risk factor for ICA/VA dissection. Aneurysms formed after ICA/VA dissection have a benign course.
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- 2021
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28. Microstructural Predictors of Cognitive Impairment in Cerebral Small Vessel Disease and the Conditions of Their Formation.
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Dobrynina LA, Gadzhieva ZS, Shamtieva KV, Kremneva EI, Akhmetzyanov BM, Kalashnikova LA, and Krotenkova MV
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Introduction: Cerebral small vessel disease (CSVD) is the leading cause of vascular and mixed degenerative cognitive impairment (CI). The variability in the rate of progression of CSVD justifies the search for sensitive predictors of CI., Materials: A total of 74 patients (48 women, average age 60.6 ± 6.9 years) with CSVD and CI of varying severity were examined using 3T MRI. The results of diffusion tensor imaging with a region of interest (ROI) analysis were used to construct a predictive model of CI using binary logistic regression, while phase-contrast magnetic resonance imaging and voxel-based morphometry were used to clarify the conditions for the formation of CI predictors., Results: According to the constructed model, the predictors of CI are axial diffusivity (AD) of the posterior frontal periventricular normal-appearing white matter (pvNAWM), right middle cingulum bundle (CB), and mid-posterior corpus callosum (CC). These predictors showed a significant correlation with the volume of white matter hyperintensity; arterial and venous blood flow, pulsatility index, and aqueduct cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) flow; and surface area of the aqueduct, volume of the lateral ventricles and CSF, and gray matter volume., Conclusion: Disturbances in the AD of pvNAWM, CB, and CC, associated with axonal damage, are a predominant factor in the development of CI in CSVD. The relationship between AD predictors and both blood flow and CSF flow indicates a disturbance in their relationship, while their location near the floor of the lateral ventricle and their link with indicators of internal atrophy, CSF volume, and aqueduct CSF flow suggest the importance of transependymal CSF transudation when these regions are damaged.
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- 2020
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29. MRI Types of Cerebral Small Vessel Disease and Circulating Markers of Vascular Wall Damage.
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Dobrynina LA, Zabitova MR, Shabalina AA, Kremneva EI, Akhmetzyanov BM, Gadzhieva ZS, Berdalin AB, Kalashnikova LA, Gnedovskaya EV, and Krotenkova MV
- Abstract
The evaluation of the clustering of magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) signs into MRI types and their relationship with circulating markers of vascular wall damage were performed in 96 patients with cerebral small vessel disease (cSVD) (31 men and 65 women; mean age, 60.91 ± 6.57 years). The serum concentrations of the tumor necrosis factor-α (TNF-α), transforming growth factor-β1 (TGF-β1), vascular endothelial growth factor-A (VEGF-A), and hypoxia-inducible factor 1-α (HIF-1α) were investigated in 70 patients with Fazekas stages 2 and 3 of white matter hyperintensities (WMH) and 21 age- and sex-matched volunteers with normal brain MRI using ELISA. The cluster analysis excluded two patients from the further analysis due to restrictions in their scanning protocol. MRI signs of 94 patients were distributed into two clusters. In the first group there were 18 patients with Fazekas 3 stage WMH. The second group consisted of 76 patients with WMH of different stages. The uneven distribution of patients between clusters limited the subsequent steps of statistical analysis; therefore, a cluster comparison was performed in patients with Fazekas stage 3 WMH, designated as MRI type 1 and type 2 of Fazekas 3 stage. There were no differences in age, sex, degree of hypertension, or other risk factors. MRI type 1 had significantly more widespread WMH, lacunes in many areas, microbleeds, atrophy, severe cognitive and gait impairments, and was associated with downregulation of VEGF-A compared with MRI type 2. MRI type 2 had more severe deep WMH, lacunes in the white matter, no microbleeds or atrophy, and less severe clinical manifestations and was associated with upregulation of TNF-α compared with MRI type 1. The established differences reflect the pathogenetic heterogeneity of cSVD and explain the variations in the clinical manifestations observed in Fazekas stage 3 of this disease.
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- 2020
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30. The ability to understand emotions is associated with interoception-related insular activation and white matter integrity during aging.
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Dobrushina OR, Arina GA, Dobrynina LA, Suslina AD, Solodchik PO, Belopasova AV, Gubanova MV, Sergeeva AN, Kremneva EI, and Krotenkova MV
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- Adult, Aged, Allostasis physiology, Brain Mapping, Cerebral Cortex diagnostic imaging, Diffusion Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Feasibility Studies, Female, Humans, Middle Aged, White Matter diagnostic imaging, Aging physiology, Cerebral Cortex physiology, Emotional Intelligence physiology, Emotional Regulation, Interoception physiology, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, White Matter anatomy & histology
- Abstract
Cerebral small vessel disease (SVD) is a major cause of cognitive impairment in elderly people. While most research focuses on the role of the classical vascular risk factors in SVD, a description of the psychophysiological mechanisms leading to the age-related brain damage may open new possibilities for prophylaxis. In the current study, we evaluated the associations between emotional abilities, interoception, and age-related vascular white matter degeneration. The work was influenced, first, by multiple studies recognizing alexithymia as a cardiovascular risk factor; second, by theories of emotions linking body's allostasis and emotional regulation; and third, by neuroimaging data highlighting the shared role of the insular cortex in interoceptive and emotional processing. In a sample of older female adults (N = 30), we performed the Mayer-Salovey-Caruso Emotional Intelligence Test, functional MRI using the heartbeat detection task, and evaluation of white matter microstructural integrity using diffusion weighted imaging. The ability to understand and analyze emotions-one of the four components of emotional intelligence-was found to be associated with higher interoception-related activation of the right anterior insula and preserved white matter microstructure. We interpret these results in light of the concept of Embodied Predictive Interoception Coding, which proposes that emotional processing, interoception, and allostasis (antecedent top-down regulation of the body's internal milieu) may rely on the shared neural mechanisms of predictive coding. The study demonstrates feasibility of the investigation of cerebrovascular diseases form a psychophysiological perspective and calls for future research., (© 2020 Society for Psychophysiological Research.)
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- 2020
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31. The Predictive Value of Salt Sensitivity and Osmotic Fragility in the Development of Cerebral Small Vessel Disease.
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Dobrynina LA, Shabalina AA, Shamtieva KV, Gnedovskaya EV, Berdalin AB, and Krotenkova MV
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- Aged, Erythrocytes drug effects, Female, Glycocalyx, Humans, Hypertension, Male, Middle Aged, Risk Factors, Russia, Sodium, Sodium Chloride blood, Cerebral Small Vessel Diseases chemically induced, Osmotic Fragility drug effects, Sodium Chloride adverse effects, Sodium Chloride, Dietary adverse effects
- Abstract
Increased salt intake in food probably affects the progression of cerebral small vessel disease (CSVD), which justifies the study of disturbances in sodium homeostasis associated with the development of CSVD. We aimed to clarify the role of salt sensitivity and osmotic fragility in the development of CSVD. Erythrocyte salt sensitivity was measured using the modified salt blood test, and osmotic fragility was measured using the classic osmotic fragility test in 73 patients with CSVD (48 women; 60.1 ± 6.5 years) and 19 healthy volunteers (14 women; 56.9 ± 6.4 years). Salt sensitivity and osmotic fragility exhibited a predictive value in relation to CSVD. These parameters were associated with an increase in white matter hyperintensities ( P = 0.019 and 0.004, respectively). Their simultaneous use increased their predictive ability for CSVD ( P < 0.000001; AUC (95% CI), 0.824 (0.724-0.923)). The possibility of predicting CSVD using erythrocyte salt sensitivity and osmotic fragility indicates the value of the individual glycocalyx buffer capacity in relation to sodium and the activity of sodium channels in the development of CSVD. Increased salt sensitivity and osmotic fragility seem to be risk factors for CSVD., Competing Interests: The authors declare no conflict of interest.
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- 2020
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32. [Clustering of diagnostic MRI signs of cerebral microangiopathy and its relationship with markers of inflammation and angiogenesis].
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Dobrynina LA, Gnedovskaya EV, Zabitova MR, Kremneva EI, Shabalina AA, Makarova AG, Tzipushtanova MM, Filatov AS, Kalashnikova LA, and Krotenkova MV
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- Aged, Cluster Analysis, Female, Humans, Inflammation, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Middle Aged, Cerebral Small Vessel Diseases diagnostic imaging, Vascular Endothelial Growth Factor A
- Abstract
Objective: To perform cluster analysis of MRI signs of cerebral microangiopathy (small vessel disease, SVD) and to clarify the relationship between the isolated groups and circulating markers of inflammation and angiogenesis., Material and Methods: The identification of groups of MRI signs (MRI types) using cluster hierarchical agglomerative analysis and iterative algorithm of k-means and assessment of their relationship with serum concentrations of tumor necrosis factor-α (TNF-α), transforming growth factor-β1 (TGF-β1), vascular endothelial growth factor-A (VEGF-A), hypoxia-inducible factor 1-α (HIF1-α) determined by ELISA were performed in 96 patients with SVD (STRIVE, 2013) (65 women, average age 60.91±6.57 years)., Results: Cluster analysis of MRI signs identified two MRI types of SVD with Fazekas grade 3 of white matter hyperintensity (WMH). MRI type 1 ( n =18; 6 women, mean age 59.1±6.8 years) and MRI type 2 ( n =22, 15 f., mean age 63.5±6.2 years) did not differ by age, sex, severity of hypertension, presence of other risk factors. MRI type 1 had a statistically significantly more pronounced WMH in the periventricular regions, multiple lacunes and microbleeds, atrophy, severe cognitive impairment and gait disorders compared with MRI type 2. Its formation was associated with a decrease in VEGF-A level. MRI type 2 had the significantly more pronounced juxtacortical WMH, white matter lacunes, in the absence of microbleeds and atrophy, and less severe clinical manifestations compared with MRI type 1. Its formation was associated with an increase in TNF-α level., Conclusion: Clustering of diagnostic MRI signs into MRI types of SVD with significant differences in the severity of clinical manifestations suggests the pathogenetic heterogeneity of age-related SVD. The relationship of MRI types with circulating markers of different mechanisms of vascular wall and brain damage indicates the dominant role of depletion of angiogenesis in the formation of MRI type 1 and increased inflammation in the formation of MRI type 2. Further studies are needed to clarify the criteria and diagnostic value of differentiation of MRI types of SVD, and also their mechanisms with the definition of pathogenetically justified prevention and treatment of various forms of SVD.
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- 2020
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33. Tissue Plasminogen Activator and MRI Signs of Cerebral Small Vessel Disease.
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Dobrynina LA, Shabalina AA, Zabitova MR, Kremneva EI, Gadzhieva ZS, Krotenkova MV, Gnedovskaya EV, Berdalin AB, and Kalashnikova LA
- Abstract
Cerebral small vessel disease (SVD) is one of the leading causes of cognitive impairment and stroke. The importance of endothelial dysfunction and high blood-brain barrier (BBB) permeability in pathogenesis, together with ischemia, is under discussion. The aim of this study was to clarify the relationship between tissue plasminogen activator (t-PA), plasminogen activator inhibitor (PAI-1), and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) signs of SVD. We examined 71 patients (23 men and 48 women; mean age: 60.5 ± 6.9 years) with clinical and MRI signs of SVD, and 21 healthy volunteers with normal MRIs. All subjects underwent 3T MRI and measurements of t-PA and PAI-1 levels. An increase in t-PA level is correlated with the volume of white matter hyperintensities (WMH) ( R = 0.289, p = 0.034), severity on the Fazekas scale ( p = 0.000), and with the size of subcortical ( p = 0.002) and semiovale ( p = 0.008) perivascular spaces. The PAI-1 level is not correlated with the t-PA level or MRI signs of SVD. The correlation between t-PA and the degree of WMH and perivascular spaces' enlargement, without a correlation with PAI-1 and lacunes, is consistent with the importance of t-PA in BBB disruption and its role in causing brain damage in SVD., Competing Interests: The authors declare no conflict of interest.
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- 2019
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34. Feasibility of Non-Gaussian Diffusion Metrics in Chronic Disorders of Consciousness.
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Kremneva EI, Legostaeva LA, Morozova SN, Sergeev DV, Sinitsyn DO, Iazeva EG, Suslin AS, Suponeva NA, Krotenkova MV, Piradov MA, and Maximov II
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Diagnostic accuracy of different chronic disorders of consciousness (DOC) can be affected by the false negative errors in up to 40% cases. In the present study, we aimed to investigate the feasibility of a non-Gaussian diffusion approach in chronic DOC and to estimate a sensitivity of diffusion kurtosis imaging (DKI) metrics for the differentiation of vegetative state/unresponsive wakefulness syndrome (VS/UWS) and minimally conscious state (MCS) from a healthy brain state. We acquired diffusion MRI data from 18 patients in chronic DOC (11 VS/UWS, 7 MCS) and 14 healthy controls. A quantitative comparison of the diffusion metrics for grey (GM) and white (WM) matter between the controls and patient group showed a significant ( p < 0.05) difference in supratentorial WM and GM for all evaluated diffusion metrics, as well as for brainstem, corpus callosum, and thalamus. An intra-subject VS/UWS and MCS group comparison showed only kurtosis metrics and fractional anisotropy differences using tract-based spatial statistics, owing mainly to macrostructural differences on most severely lesioned hemispheres. As a result, we demonstrated an ability of DKI metrics to localise and detect changes in both WM and GM and showed their capability in order to distinguish patients with a different level of consciousness., Competing Interests: The authors declare no conflict of interest.
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- 2019
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35. [Predictors of acute cerebral embolic lesions during carotid artery stenting].
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Tanashian MM, Medvedev RB, Gemdzhian ÉG, Skrylev CI, Krotenkova MV, Shchipakin VL, Koshcheev AI, and Sinitsyn IA
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- Acute Disease, Carotid Artery, Internal diagnostic imaging, Carotid Stenosis diagnostic imaging, Diffusion Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Embolic Protection Devices, Female, Humans, Intracranial Embolism diagnostic imaging, Intracranial Embolism prevention & control, Prognosis, Prospective Studies, Risk Factors, Treatment Outcome, Angioplasty adverse effects, Blood Vessel Prosthesis Implantation adverse effects, Carotid Artery, Internal surgery, Carotid Stenosis surgery, Intracranial Embolism etiology, Stents adverse effects
- Abstract
The authors carried out a prospective study aimed at revealing predictors of acute embolic lesions of cerebral vessels during angioplasty with stenting of the internal carotid artery. The study enrolled a total of 54 patients who between May 2015 and December 2018 underwent carotid angioplasty with stenting performed at the Department of Vascular and Endovascular Surgery of the Research Centre of Neurology. The procedure of internal carotid artery stenting may be accompanied by intraoperative acute embolic lesions. In order to reveal intraoperative acute embolic lesions of cerebral vessels all patients before and 24 hours after the intervention were subjected to diffusion-weighted magnetic resonance imaging. Thirty-six patients received classical carotid stents (Xact and Acculink) and 18 patients received Casper stents. The patients of both groups were comparable by 24 characteristics studied, including the incidence of intraoperative acute cerebral embolic lesions (18/36 for the classical stents and 10/18 for the Casper stent), which made it possible to unite them into one group in order to increase the power of the study. All acute embolic lesions detected by the diffusion-weighted magnetic resonance imaging (prior to stenting and 24 hours thereafter) were clinically, asymptomatic with no perioperative stroke observed. In order to reveal predictors of intraoperative acute embolic lesions of cerebral vessels we analysed 22 characteristics of the patients, with the obtained findings demonstrating the following signs: a low-intensity (below 20 dB) ultrasonographic signal reflected from fragments of an atherosclerotic plaque during ultrasound examination prior to stenting (p=0.001) - a sign strongly associated with acute embolic lesions (sensitivity - 75%, specificity - 92%); symptomatic stenosis according to the anamnestic data (p=0.02) - a sign significantly associated with acute embolic lesions; female gender (p=0.06) - a sign moderately associated with acute embolic lesions; a history previously endured (according to the anamnestic data) operations on coronary and/or carotid arteries (p=0.09) - a sign weakly associated with acute embolic lesions. Based on the obtained findings we proposed a prognostic scale to assess the risk of acute embolic lesions of cerebral vessels during internal carotid artery stenting. Knowing the factors associated with intraoperative acute embolic lesions will allow the endovascular surgeon to single out the patients at increased risk of acute embolic lesions.
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- 2019
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36. [Intracerebral hemorrhage in the late period of internal carotid artery dissection].
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Kalashnikova LA, Dobrynina LA, Dreval MV, Gubanova MV, Krotenkova MV, Konovalov RN, and Legenko MS
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- Carotid Artery, Internal, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Treatment Outcome, Carotid Artery, Internal, Dissection complications, Cerebral Hemorrhage etiology, Intracranial Aneurysm, Stroke
- Abstract
Cervical artery dissection is the common cause of ischemic stroke in young and middle-age patients. According to our previous studies, dissection is related to arterial wall dysplastic changes, which in their turn are due to mitochondrial cytopathy. The authors describe three male patients who at the age of 53, 25 and 35 years underwent internal artery (ICA) dissection with occlusion of its lumen and subsequent recanalization in one of them. In 3.5 months, 13.5 years and 3 years respectively, patients developed intracerebral hemorrhage (IСH), which was not related to arterial hypertension, cerebral arterial aneurysms and anticoagulants. IСH were located on the side of ICA occluded after dissection (2 patients) or bilaterally in the territory of patent ICA (1 patient). Multivoxel
1 H-MR spectroscopy performed in one patient on 40 and 48 days after ICH revealed a high lactate peak in the externally unchanged hemispheric white matter. It is assumed that mitochondrial cytopathy in patients with dissection may involve large as well as small intracerebral arteries (mitochondrial microangiopathy), which could be the cause of ICH.- Published
- 2019
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37. [The role of arterial, venous blood and cerebrospinal fluid flow disturbances in forming cognitive impairment types in age-related cerebral microangiophathy].
- Author
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Dobrynina LA, Gadzhieva ZS, Akhmetzyanov BM, Kalashnikova LA, and Krotenkova MV
- Subjects
- Cerebral Small Vessel Diseases cerebrospinal fluid, Cognitive Dysfunction cerebrospinal fluid, Dementia cerebrospinal fluid, Dementia complications, Dementia physiopathology, Executive Function, Humans, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Memory, Middle Aged, Arteries physiopathology, Cerebral Small Vessel Diseases complications, Cerebral Small Vessel Diseases physiopathology, Cerebrospinal Fluid metabolism, Cognitive Dysfunction complications, Cognitive Dysfunction physiopathology, Veins physiopathology
- Abstract
Background: Age-related cerebral microangiopathy (small vessel disease, SVD) is the main cause of vascular and mixed cognitive impairment (CI) with a complex neuropsychological profile., Aim: To investigate the role of arterial and venous blood flow and cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) flow, as well as their interrelation, in the forming of CI types in patients with SVD., Material and Methods: Fifty patients (31 f., mean age 61.2±6,2) with SVD (STRIVE, 2013), including 37 with mild CI and 13 with dementia, were examined. A type of CI was determined based on combination of standard deviations from normal results on memory and executive function tests: isolated dysexecutive (13) and predominantly dysexecutive (6), predominantly amnestic (12), mixed, equal impairment of EF and memory, (19). In the statistical analysis, groups of the isolated and predominantly dysexecutive types were merged according to the dominance of deviations in the EF into the dysexecutive type of CI (19). Phase contrast MRI (PhC-MRI) was used to assess characteristics of arterial and venous blood flow and CSF flow on different levels. Indexes of pulse and intracranial compliance and surface of the cerebral aqueduct were calculated., Results: Patients with all CI types had a CSF flow systolic peak delay at the cervical level. Mixed and dysexecutive CI types as compared with predominantly amnestic type and control were defined by blood flow reduction in the sinus rectus, and mixed type by the additional decrease in its pulse wave width, blood flow reduction in an internal jugular artery and maximal blood flow velocity in the inner carotid artery, the increase in the intracranial compliance index and surface of the cerebral aqueduct., Conclusion: The neuropsychological CI type in SVD is defined by features of pathophysiological mechanisms conditioned on differences in blood flow and CSF flow impairment severity and formed hydrodynamic interaction between them. Differential features of CI types in SVD defined by PhC-MRI might become important predictive indicators of potential interaction between SVD and degeneration, improve understanding of risk factors, pathogenesis, prevention and treatment of age-related brain damage.
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. [Executive functions: fMRI of healthy volunteers during Stroop test and the serial count test].
- Author
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Dobrynina LA, Gadzhieva ZS, Morozova SN, Kremneva EI, Krotenkova MV, Kashina EM, and Poddubskaya AA
- Subjects
- Adult, Healthy Volunteers, Humans, Stroop Test, Brain Mapping, Executive Function, Magnetic Resonance Imaging
- Abstract
Aim: To assess executive function in healthy adults using fMRI., Material and Methods: An analysis of fMRI activation and functional connectivity during a serial count task (as a shifting function test) and color-word Stroop test (classical inhibition function test) was made for 12 healthy adults., Results and Conclusion: The executive control network and salience network activation was comparable in both tasks. Nevertheless, there were differences between two tests in functional connectivity of the dorsolateral prefrontal cortex (DLPFC) and the supplementary motor area (SMA) with other brain regions, that can be explained by the differences in the regulatory mechanisms of task performance. Stroop test assumes its automatic performance, and control of program realization is performed mainly by executive-control network. The connectivity between the two DLPFCs with the lower parietal lobules and with each other and inhibition by SMA connectivity with only the right hemisphere regions support this notion. Serial count task excludes the process of monotonous learning, that was confirmed by widespread SMA connections in the absence of connectivity of the DLPFC with executive control network regions. This connectivity pattern allows assuming the leading role of SMA in certain brain regions choice and switching their activity for providing attention and executive control of cognitive operations shift during task performance. These findings allow us to consider the serial count task as the relevant fMRI test for executive functions with the special focus on set shifting, also in patients with executive function deficits. Furthermore, SMA region mapping with the serial count test paradigm could be considered as a potential target for navigated transcranial magnetic stimulation (nTMS) in these patients.
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
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39. [Radiologically isolated syndrome as a possible preclinical stage of primary-progressive multiple sclerosis].
- Author
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Popova EV, Bryukhov VV, Boyko AN, and Krotenkova MV
- Subjects
- Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Russia, Multiple Sclerosis, Multiple Sclerosis, Chronic Progressive
- Abstract
The article presents a clinical case-report of transformation of radiologically isolated syndrome (RIS) to primary-progressive multiple sclerosis (PPMS). It also provides a review of international and Russian data on the comparison of clinical and MRI characteristics of PPMS with relapsing-remitting multiple sclerosis and secondary-progressive multiple sclerosis and the review of the current data on the risks of transition of RIS to PPMS.
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. [Brain atrophy and perfusion changes in patients with remitting and secondary progressive multiple sclerosis].
- Author
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Krotenkova IA, Bryukhov VV, Krotenkova MV, Zakharova MN, and Askarova LS
- Subjects
- Atrophy, Brain, Humans, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Multiple Sclerosis, Chronic Progressive
- Abstract
Aim: To study the relationship of brain atrophy and changes in perfusion with an increase in the level of disability in patients with multiple sclerosis (MS)., Material and Methods: Twenty patients with remitting MS, 20 patients with secondary progressive multiple sclerosis (SPMS) and 20 healthy people were studied. The level of neurological deficit was assessed with EDSS and cognitive status with PASAT. MRI of the brain (standard impulse sequences and 3D-T1-MPR for voxel MRI-morphometry) and perfusion computed tomography with the assessment of visually intact white matter (VIWM) and thalamus were performed., Results: Compared to the control group, patients with MS had a significant atrophy of subcortical gray matter. Patients with SPMS in addition had an atrophy of some cortical areas which was correlated with EDSS scores (p<0.05). The correlation between cognitive impairment and the volume of the left inferior parietal lobule (r=0.677; p=0.011) and worsening of perfusion of VIWM of frontal and parietal lobes, thalamus on both sides was observed in patients with SPMS compared to those with remitting MS. That was correlated with cognitive performance assessed by PASAT., Conclusion: Patterns of atrophy distribution in different types of MS were determined. The level of disability is correlated with the severity of brain atrophy. Hypoperfusion of VIWM that was correlated with cognitive impairment was found in patients with SPMS.
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. [Cognitive disorders in the middle-aged population and cerebrovascular risk factors].
- Author
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Gnedovskaya EV, Kravchenko MA, Nikolaeva NS, Chechetkin AO, Krotenkova MV, and Varakin YY
- Subjects
- Adult, Cerebrovascular Disorders, Cognition, Female, Humans, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Male, Middle Aged, Neuropsychological Tests, Risk Factors, Cognition Disorders
- Abstract
Aim: To study the frequency of subjective and objective cognitive disorders in the middle-aged population and their associations with main and additional cerebrovascular risk factors., Material and Methods: The authors examined 169 men and 239 women aged 40-59 years. Medical history study, blood tests, electrocardiography, brachiocephalic and common femoral arteries scan, echocardiography, magnetic resonance imaging of the brain (MRI) were performed. Luria and Munsterberg tests were done to assess cognitive dysfunction. Affective disorders were assessed by the Hospital scale of anxiety and depression., Results and Conclusion: Absence of subjective (SCI) and/or objective (OCI) cognitive impairments was found in 26,5%; 10% had purely SCI, more than 35,7% of complaints were accompanied by deviations in neuropsychological test results (OCI+), over 25% had only OCI-. The average age of patients with OCI+ was higher than in the control group. In women, the frequency of SCI was twice as high and OCI less frequent as in men. Absence of cognitive impairment and SCI were observed more frequently in individuals with higher education. The prevalence of multiple white matter lesions (WML) in MRI was 36%. Multiple WML and atherosclerosis of major arteries were more common in OCI+ group (47%). Mild affective disorders were more frequent in the studied groups. Anxiety disorders were more common than depressive ones. The amount of patients with affective disorders was highest in OCI+. Therefore, SCI is a common phenomenon among people aged 40-60 years. The use of simple neuropsychological tests in screening examination allows to identify individuals who are most appropriate for active search for vascular risk factors. Anxiety and depressive disorders cause a significant proportion of SCI among middle-aged people and are an important additional target for therapeutic measures.
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. Ultrasound diagnostics of a spontaneous arteriovenous fistula of the head and neck.
- Author
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Zakharkina MV, Chechetkin AO, Krotenkova MV, and Konovalov RN
- Abstract
An arteriovenous fistula is an abnormal connection between the arterial and venous systems. In the literature, there are well-described ultrasound findings of iatrogenic arteriovenous fistula as a potential complication from percutaneous transarterial or transvenous procedures. The most important sign is direct visualization of the fistula in the place of the access site. It is necessary to look for secondary signs of arterialization of the veins, which can suggest a diagnosis of an arteriovenous fistula. However, the accuracy and diagnostic quality of duplex scanning in the diagnostics of a congenital or spontaneous arteriovenous fistula of the head and neck area in adults have been poorly described in the literature. In this study, we discuss the opportunities of duplex scanning, based on two different cases of an arteriovenous fistula revealed by ultrasound and then confirmed by computer tomographic angiography.
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. [Prediction of ischaemic lesions of the brain in reconstructive operations on internal carotid arteries].
- Author
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Tanashian MM, Medvedev RB, Evdokimenko AN, Gemdzhian ÉG, Ckrylev SI, Lagoda OV, Krotenkova MV, and Suslin AS
- Subjects
- Aged, Angioplasty adverse effects, Cerebrovascular Circulation, Endarterectomy, Carotid adverse effects, Female, Humans, Male, Preoperative Care methods, Prognosis, Risk Assessment methods, Angioplasty methods, Brain Ischemia diagnosis, Brain Ischemia etiology, Brain Ischemia prevention & control, Carotid Artery Diseases diagnosis, Carotid Artery Diseases surgery, Carotid Artery, Internal diagnostic imaging, Carotid Artery, Internal surgery, Diffusion Magnetic Resonance Imaging methods, Endarterectomy, Carotid methods, Postoperative Complications diagnosis, Postoperative Complications prevention & control
- Abstract
The present study was undertaken to examine the relationship between the level of the intensity of the ultrasonic signal reflected from atherosclerotic plaques (ATP) of carotid arteries and the risk for formation of an ischaemic lesion in the brain matter, detected during diffusion-weighted magnetic resonance imaging (DW-MRI) performed 24 hours after carotid endarterectomy (CEA) or carotid angioplasty and stenting (CAS). Our prospective study included a total of 78 patients presenting with stenosis of the sinus of the interior carotid artery. Of these, 42 patients were subjected to CEA and 36 subjects endured CAS. All patients in the preoperative period underwent ultrasonographic examination with determination of the degree of heterogeneity of ATPs and registration of the values of the intensity of acoustic characteristics of the signal. The condition of the brain matter before and 24 hours after the intervention was assesses by the findings of DW-MRI. None of the patients after the reconstructive intervention during the postoperative period demonstrated any evidence of acute cerebral circulation disorders. DW-MRI carried out 24 hours after the operation revealed acute ischaemia foci (AIF) in 9 (21.4%) patients after CEA and in 18 (50%) patients after CAS (p=0.05). It was revealed that the postoperative occurrence of AIF was related to the intensity of the ultrasonographic signal prior to the operation: in the CEA group patients the postoperative ischaemic foci were associated with high-intensity ultrasonographic signals (more than 25 dB), whereas in the CAS group patients, vice versa - with low-intensity signals (less than 25dB). For CEA, sensitivity and specificity of the preoperative ultrasonographic method of predicting postoperative embolic lesions of the brain appeared to be similar, amounting to 100% each (with the cut-off point of high- and low-intensity signals equaling 25 dB), and for CAS, sensitivity of the method turned out to be 75% and specificity - 100% (with the same cut-off point of 25 dB). A conclusion was drawn that quantitative characteristics of the intensity of an ultrasonographic signal from fragments of atherosclerotic plaques of the sinus of the internal carotid artery made it possible with high probability to predict the risk for the development of AIF in the brain matter after both CEA and CAS and may therefore serve as a reliable criterion for appropriate therapeutic decision-making with the lowest risk of inflicting lesions in a particular case. The threshold cut-off points of high- and low-intensity ultrasonographic signals, as well as their clinical significance are yet to be specified and verified with the growing number of cases.
- Published
- 2017
44. [Atypical multiple sclerosis - Balo's concentric sclerosis: two case-reports and a review].
- Author
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Popova EV, Bryukhov VV, Boyko AN, Krotenkova MV, Konovalova OE, and Sharanova SN
- Subjects
- Brain pathology, Humans, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Diffuse Cerebral Sclerosis of Schilder diagnosis, Multiple Sclerosis diagnosis
- Abstract
This article presents two clinical cases of patients diagnosed with Balo's concentric sclerosis. Distinctive features of the pathogenesis in the aspect of differential diagnosis from other forms of multiple sclerosis and possible treatment are discussed.
- Published
- 2017
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45. [A current view on the MRI diagnosis of multiple sclerosis: an update of 2016 revised MRI criteria].
- Author
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Bryukhov VV, Krotenkova IA, Morozova SN, and Krotenkova MV
- Subjects
- Brain diagnostic imaging, Humans, Spinal Cord, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Multiple Sclerosis diagnostic imaging, Multiple Sclerosis, Chronic Progressive diagnostic imaging, Multiple Sclerosis, Relapsing-Remitting diagnostic imaging
- Abstract
Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) is the primary method for confirming the clinical diagnosis of multiple sclerosis (MS). The article presents the current data on using MRI of the brain and spinal cord for diagnosis in suspected MS. Special attention is paid to the MRI criteria of McDonald and MAGNIMS for relapsing-remitting MS (RRMS) and primary-progressive MS (PPMS) in the latest revisions of 2010 and 2016. The information provided can help radiologists and neurologists to optimize the use of MRI in clinical practice for diagnosis of MS.
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. [Posterior reversible encephalopathy syndrome due to hypocalcemia: a description of a case and an analysis of a pathogenic role of electrolyte disturbances].
- Author
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Dobrynina LA, Kalashnikova LA, Bakulin IS, Kremneva EI, Krotenkova MV, and Shamtieva KV
- Subjects
- Brain diagnostic imaging, Brain pathology, Confusion diagnosis, Electrolytes blood, Female, Headache diagnosis, Humans, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Middle Aged, Posterior Leukoencephalopathy Syndrome diagnostic imaging, Seizures diagnosis, Hypocalcemia complications, Posterior Leukoencephalopathy Syndrome diagnosis, Posterior Leukoencephalopathy Syndrome etiology
- Abstract
Afemale patient with recurrent posterior reversible encephalopathy syndrome, severe hypocalcemia due to extirpation of the parathyroid glands is described. The disease was characterized by the acute development of headache, seizures, cognitive and behavioral disorders, mental confusion, transitory blood pressure increasing. The vasogenic edema in the posterior parts of the brain, detected by CT at the first exacerbation,was completely regressed. The residual neurological deficit and MRI changes remained after the recurrent exacerbations. Main clinical features of PRESare explained by hypocalcemia and accompanying electrolyte disturbances.The reported case shows the necessity to study blood electrolytes in patients with PRES to clarify their pathogenic role and the necessity of drug correction.
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. [Primary-progressive multiple sclerosis as an atypical demyelinating process].
- Author
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Popova EV, Bryukhov VV, Boyko AN, and Krotenkova MV
- Subjects
- Humans, Demyelinating Diseases physiopathology, Multiple Sclerosis, Chronic Progressive physiopathology
- Abstract
This article presents an overview of current data on primary-progressive multiple sclerosis (MS). In this aspect, the authors consider its characteristics in comparison to other MS forms as well as possible markers of the disease, criteria of diagnosis and therapeutic options in the present and the future times.
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. [Standartization of MRI studies in multiple sclerosis].
- Author
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Bryukhov VV, Krotenkova IA, Morozova SN, and Krotenkova MV
- Subjects
- Brain, Brain Stem diagnostic imaging, Disease Progression, Humans, Spinal Cord diagnostic imaging, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Multiple Sclerosis diagnostic imaging
- Abstract
The use of magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) in patients with multiple sclerosis has markedly increased in recent years. The main task of the MRI studies after the diagnosis of multiple sclerosis is to assess the dynamics of MRI for determining disease progression and monitoring the efficacy of therapy. In this regard, it is very important to obtain the most identical baseline and follow-up MRI that is possible when a single standard protocol is used. This article presents the protocol of brain MRI and spinal cord MRI and interpretation of MRI studies in patients with multiple sclerosis.
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. [Middle and anterior cerebral arteries dissection as a cause of ischemic stroke in a 7-year-old boy].
- Author
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Kalashnikova LA, Dreval MV, Dobrinina LA, and Krotenkova MV
- Subjects
- Brain, Brain Ischemia, Child, Headache, Humans, Magnetic Resonance Angiography, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Male, Middle Cerebral Artery, Aortic Dissection complications, Anterior Cerebral Artery, Intracranial Aneurysm complications, Stroke etiology
- Abstract
Authors describe a 7-year-old boy, who developed a severe right-sided hemiparesis, aphasia, seizure, and confusion state during sport games. There was no headache. Allergic dermatitis in the past medical history and influenza vaccination 2 weeks before stroke were recorded. On the 12th day of disease, MRI of the brain revealed an acute infarction in the territory of left anterior and middle cerebral arteries with hemorrhagic transformation. MPA (15 day) showed occlusion of the left ACA and MCA. HR-MRI T1_db_fs weighted imaging (36 day) found intramural hematoma (IMH) in ACA and MCA with marked stenosis of the lumen. After 3 months, HR-MRI/MRA showed the complete regression of IMH, recanalization of the arterial lumen, prolonged irregular MCA stenosis. Neurological deficit regressed significantly.
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. [A DTI study of the spinal cord lesion in patients with multiple sclerosis during the follow-up after relapse].
- Author
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Morozova SN, Bryukhov VV, Trifonova OV, Kremneva EI, and Krotenkova MV
- Subjects
- Brain diagnostic imaging, Chronic Disease, Demyelinating Diseases, Follow-Up Studies, Humans, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Neurologic Examination, Recurrence, Spinal Cord Diseases etiology, Diffusion Tensor Imaging, Multiple Sclerosis, Relapsing-Remitting complications, Spinal Cord diagnostic imaging, Spinal Cord Diseases diagnostic imaging
- Abstract
Unlabelled: Spinal cord involvement is frequent in multiple sclerosis (MS) but the correlation between spinal cord damage on conventional MRI and clinical symptoms is not always obvious. Diffusion tensor imaging (DTI) is a sensitive technique for revealing tissue damage., Objective: to investigate spinal cord DTI changes in MS patients during the relapse and in the follow-up., Material and Methods: Data were acquired from 25 patients with relapsing-remitting MS during the relapse characterized by unilateral light hand palsy, in three and twelve months after it. All patients underwent full neurological examination and MRI including conventional head and neck MRI and DTI of the brain and upper spinal cord in the sagittal plane. Twelve healthy subjects entered the control group., Results and Conclusion: Spinal cord sagittal DTI provides a reliable information about significant changes in MS patients compared tothe control group both inside demyelinating lesions and in the normal appearing spinal cord. These differences are preserved both in 3 and 12 months after the relapse and together with clinical recovery create evidence of functional compensatory mechanisms development. A tendency towards DTI parameters normalization together with faster fine motor skills recovery in patients without the asymmetrical decrease in vibration sense shows an important role that afferentation plays in recovery after the relapse.
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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